In this post, Heather Cox Richardson demonstrates why she has over one million paid subscribers. She brilliantly weaves together events of the day to show the pattern on the rug. The economy is humming along with new jobs created by Biden. Meanwhile Trump plans massive cuts to Medicaid to pay for tax cuts for billionaires. Trump’s goal: to destroy the foundations of the American government. We were warned.
She writes:
On Friday, Secretary of Commerce Gina Raimondo locked in a $6.6 billion deal with the Taiwan Semiconductor Manufacturing Company for it to invest $65 billion in three state-of-the-art fabrication plants in Arizona. This will bring thousands of jobs to the state. The money comes from the CHIPS and Science Act, about which Trump told podcaster Joe Rogan on October 25: “That CHIPS deal is so bad.” House speaker Mike Johnson (R-LA) said he would work to repeal the law, although he backed off that statement when Republicans noted the jobs the law has brought to their states.
Also on Friday, a Trump-appointed federal judge struck down a Biden administration rule that would have made 4 million workers eligible for overtime pay. The rule raised the salary level below which an employer has to pay overtime from $35,568 to $43,888 this year and up to $58,656 in 2025. The decision by Texas judge Sean D. Jordan kills the measure nationally.
On Sunday, speaking from the Amazon rainforest in Brazil, President Joe Biden said that it would not be possible to reverse America’s “clean energy revolution,” which has now provided jobs across the country, primarily in Republican-dominated states. Biden noted that the U.S. would spend $11 billion on financing international responses to climate change in 2024, an increase of six times from when he began his term.
But President-elect Trump has called climate change a hoax and has vowed to claw back money from the Inflation Reduction Act appropriated to mitigate it, and to turn the U.S. back to fossil fuels. What Trump will have a harder time disrupting, according to Nicolás Rivero of the Washington Post, is the new efficiency standards the Biden administration put in place for appliances. He can, though, refuse to advance those standards.
Meanwhile Trump and his team are announcing a complete reworking of the American government. They claim a mandate, although as final vote tallies are coming in, it turns out that Trump did not win 50% of the vote, and CNN statistician Harry Enten notes that his margin comes in at 44th out of the 51 elections that have been held since 1824. He also had very short coattails—four Democrats won in states Trump carried—and the Republicans have the smallest House majority since there have been 50 states, despite the help their numbers have had from the extreme gerrymandering in states like North Carolina.
More Americans voted for someone other than Trump than voted for him.
Although Trump ran on lowering the cost of consumer goods, Trump and his sidekick Elon Musk, along with pharmaceutical entrepreneur Vivek Ramaswamy, have vowed to slash the U.S. government, apparently taking their cue from Argentina’s self-described anarcho-capitalist president Javier Milei, who was the first foreign leader to visit Trump after the election. Milei’s “shock therapy” to his country threw the nation into a deep recession, just as Musk says his plans will create “hardship” for Americans before enabling the country to rebuild with security.
Ramaswamy today posted on social media, “A reasonable formula to fix the U.S. government: Milei-style cuts, on steroids.” He has suggested that cuts are easier than people think. The Washington Post’s Philip Bump noted that on a podcast in September, Ramaswamy said as an example: “If your Social Security number ends in an odd number, you’re out. If it ends in an even number, you’re in. There’s a 50 percent cut right there. Of those who remain, if your Social Security number starts in an even number, you’re in, and if it starts with an odd number, you’re out. Boom. That’s a 75 percent reduction done.”
But, as Bump notes, this reveals Ramaswamy’s lack of understanding of how the government actually works. Social Security numbers aren’t random; the first digit refers to where the number was obtained. So this seemingly random system would target certain areas of the country.
Today, both Jacob Bogage, Jeff Stein, and Dan Diamond of the Washington Post and Robert Tait of The Guardian reported that Trump’s economic advisors are talking with Republicans in Congress about cuts to Medicaid, the Supplemental Nutrition Assistance Program (SNAP) formerly known as food stamps, and other welfare programs, in order to cover the enormous costs of extending tax cuts for the wealthy and corporations. Medicaid is the nation’s health insurance for low-income Americans and long-term care. It covers more than 90 million Americans, one in five of us. Rural populations, which tend to vote Republican, use supplemental nutrition programs more than urban dwellers do.
The Washington Post reporters note that Republicans deny that they are trying to reduce benefits for the poor. They are, they say, trying to reduce wasteful and unnecessary spending. “We know there’s tremendous waste,” said House Budget Committee chairman Jodey Arrington (R-TX). “What we don’t seem to have in the hour of action, like when we have the trifecta and unified Republican leadership, is the political courage to do it for the love of country. [Trump] does.”
Those cuts will likely not sit well with the Republicans whose constituents think Trump promised there would be no cuts to the programs on which they depend.
Trump’s planned nominations of unqualified extremists have also run into trouble. Senate Republicans are so far refusing to abandon their constitutional powers in order to act as a rubber stamp to enable Trump’s worst instincts. Former representative Matt Gaetz (R-FL), a Trump bomb thrower, was unqualified to be the nation’s attorney general in any case, but as more information comes out about his alleged participation in drug fueled orgies, including the news that a woman allegedly told the House Ethics Committee that she saw him engage in sex with a minor, those problems have gotten worse.
Legal analyst Marcy Wheeler notes that the lawyers representing the witnesses for the committee are pushing for the release of the ethics committee’s report at least in part out of concern that if he becomes attorney general, Gaetz will retaliate against them.
According to Vanity Fair’s Gabriel Sherman, fear of the MAGA Republican colleagues who are already trying to bully them into becoming Trump loyalists is infecting congress members, too. When asked if Gaetz was qualified for the attorney general post, Representative Mike Simpson (R-ID) answered: “Are you sh*tting me, that you just asked that question? No. But hell, you’ll print that and now I’m going to be investigated.”
The many fringe medical ideas of Trump’s pick for secretary of health and human services, Robert F. Kennedy Jr., earned him the right-wing New York Post editorial board’s denigration as “nuts on a lot of fronts.” The board called his views “a head-scratching spaghetti of what we can only call warped conspiracy theories, and not just on vaccines.” Kennedy is a well-known opponent of vaccines—he called Covid-19 vaccines a “crime against humanity”—and has called for the National Institutes of Health to “take a break” of about eight years from studying infectious diseases, insisting that they should focus on chronic diseases instead.
Writing in the New York Times yesterday, Peter Baker noted that Trump “has rolled a giant grenade into the middle of the nation’s capital and watched with mischievous glee to see who runs away and who throws themselves on it.” Mischievous glee is one way to put it; another is that he is trying to destroy the foundations of the American government.
Baker notes that none of Trump’s selections would have been anything but laughable in the pre-Trump era when, for example, Democratic cabinet nominations were sunk for a failure to pay employment taxes for a nanny, or for a donor-provided car. Nor would a president-elect in the past have presumed to tap three of his own defense lawyers for top positions in the Department of Justice, effectively guaranteeing that he will be protected from scrutiny.
A former deputy White House press secretary during Trump’s first term, Sarah Matthews, said Trump is “drunk on power right now because he feels like he was given a mandate by winning the popular vote.”
Today Trump confirmed that he intends to bypass normal legal constraints on his actions by declaring a national emergency on his first day in office in order to launch his mass deportation of undocumented migrants. While the Congressional Budget Office estimates this mass deportation will cost at least $88 billion a year, another cost that is rarely mentioned is that according to Bloomberg, undocumented immigrants currently pay about $100 billion a year in taxes. Losing that income, too, will likely have to be made up with cuts from elsewhere.
Finally, today, CNBC’s economic analyst Carl Quintanilla noted today that average gasoline prices are expected to fall below $3.00 a gallon before the Thanksgiving holiday.

You’re saying she does the weave?
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Good morning Diane and everyone,
I just finished Heather Cox Richardson’s book Democracy Awakening: Notes on the State of America. It’s a good book in simple English which traces how we arrived at this point.
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Normally I would say that Republicans will pay for the damage when the midterms come, but the normal laws of physics don’t seem to be working anymore.
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We are the foundation of our Democracy. This is not a slogan, a chapter heading in an old Problems of Democracy textbook nor a Call to Arms placard that gets trashed as soon as the protest March is over.
We have got to get our act together immediately. Boyd Bode, John Dewey, Elsie Ripley Clapp, James Baldwin, Jane Addams, Ritchie Calder and others come to mind as people to think with. So does Septima Clark, Esau Jenkins and the Civil Rights Era Citizenship Movement that began on RACIST South Carolina John’s Island.🏝️
We are about to collectively remember how to author a new movement in our own behalf.
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A “national emergency”? HA! TRUMP is a national emergency.
And here’s more code to translate, though this is a little more complex, all you have to do is zero in on the unspoken bias of the speaker and then read the narrative through that lens. First, the narrative:
“They are, they say, trying to reduce wasteful and unnecessary spending. ‘We know there’s tremendous waste,’ said House Budget Committee chairman Jodey Arrington (R-TX). ‘What we don’t seem to have in the hour of action, like when we have the trifecta and unified Republican leadership, is the political courage to do it for the love of country. [Trump] does.’”
Encoded bias 1: Spending money on poor people and children, none of whom make money, is a “tremendous waste” and therefore is “unnecessary spending.” (Better to give billionaires a free ride. And anyway, love and caring for “the people” are political neanderthals. )
Encoded bias 2: Political courage=Trump is thoughtless, vindictive, and cruel, and I’m working on that “trifecta” . . . the qualities of being a bully and ignoring other people’s problems. They are probably self-made anyway.
Encoded bias 3: For “the love of country” = Here, privilege is the starting place for white, rich, males. Everyone else either in my bed, under the bus, or deported.
Diane: I am so glad to have been introduced to Cox Richardson. CBK
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Pretty sure XLV+II has already bought his get out of jail free card by taking Vance as VP. Resignation early in the term on some lame pretext and full pardon for all crimes past or future.
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That’s my prediction also. Care to start a pool for the date? It’s already been stated that Melania will NOT be living in the White House this time around. My guess is that “the administration” will be put into place very early so that trump can anoint Vance then return back to Florida to “retire” and play golf. I’m gonna say mid -February.
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And give up Airforce 1? No way!
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I don’t know. That seems more like a 1970s thing, especially since Trump seems to think he can pardon himself. Apparently he can do anything he wants with impunity. If he’ll do Jan. 6, I wouldn’t put it past him to do much worse. I could imagine a State of the Union address resembling Saddam Hussein’s 1979 Ba’ath Party Purge where Trump says there are “traitors” in congress (i.e. those who don’t support him), has their names read, immediately has them forcibly removed, and executed.
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RFK, Jr., what a guy.
His 2nd wife was Mary Kathleen Richardson Kennedy (née Richardson; October 4, 1959 – May 16, 2012)
Read below to see how horrible JFK Jr. was/is:
During their marriage, Kennedy was widely regarded as a serial philanderer and was known among his friends for sending explicit nude photos of women that they presumed he had taken, according to Vanity Fair.[11][12] The highly-publicized allegations of sexual assault against Kennedy by the family’s then-babysitter, Eliza Cooney, allegedly took place during this period.
On May 16, 2012, Richardson was found dead at her home in Bedford, New York. Her death was ruled a suicide by hanging.[18] An autopsy revealed that she had antidepressants in her blood.[19]Before her death, Richardson had discovered Kennedy’s personal journal from 2001, in which he recorded sexual encounters with 37 different women. According to Kennedy, Richardson passed the journal along “to her sisters with instructions that, if anything happened to her, [it should be] published in the press”.[20][21]
Her funeral, organized by the Kennedy family, was held at St. Patrick Catholic Church in Bedford.[22][23] On May 21, 2012, a memorial service organized by the Richardson family was held at the Standard Hotel in Manhattan.[24] A legal battle between her widower and her brother, Thomas W. Richardson, ensued over which family should have control over her remains.[24]
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What would Jesus do?
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=3E5jjHW6ncc
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Thanks, Yvonne.
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You are most welcome, Diane.
James Talarico has other posts and his sermons are NOT what is being promoted by Trump and Trump’s minions.
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Let’s take a look at how great a job Elon Musk does with his own companies.
“The social media platform formerly known as Twitter is worth almost 80% less than two years ago when Elon Musk bought it, according to estimates from investment giant Fidelity. X no longer trades publicly after Musk shelled out $44 billion to take it private in October 2022.”
“2020 was the first time that Tesla turned a full-year profit. Previously, net losses had begun to accelerate in 2014, and so did research and development (R&D) expenses. Between 2014 and 2023, Tesla’s research and development expenses”
How does Muck stay in business?
“Elon Musk’s companies, Tesla and SpaceX, have received billions of dollars in federal and state funding”
“Musk’s companies have also been targeted in at least 20 recent investigations or reviews, including over the safety of Tesla cars and the environmental damage caused by SpaceX rockets”
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Thank you, Lloyd.
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Yet Musk is the richest man in the world, with more than $300 billion in assets. Tesla is the most valuable auto manufacturer in the U.S.
Why?
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Something tells me that that $300B is highly inflated. . .
. . . just like his ego.
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I’ve never been a big fan of counterfactual history. ie. what if Hitler invaded England or the North lost Gettysburg etc..
But the current ‘trump-jectory’ of the U.S. seems like a nightmare version of that genre -come to life. It reminds me in a way of the disastrous future imagined in Stephen King’s novel 11/23/63, except we are actually living through our own whacked out future in real time.
Despite this rapidly unfolding, living disaster called 2025, I am forcing myself to watch the evening news and read, read, read no matter how bad it gets. If only someone sold big, fake, rubber TV sets so that I could kick one around the living room come 6:30 p.m. each night.
In my counter-counter factual vision what a much better planet could be, I imagine Diane and Heather being listened to in the White House. If only it was true. I’d sleep a lot sounder, that’s for sure.
BTW I met WaPo reporter Phillip Bump (mentioned above) on a very back street in Scranton, PA not long before the election. He’s the real deal, hitting the pavement to search out the story. We’re very lucky to have him and his colleagues, that’s for sure. Please continue to support the Post, everyone.
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P.S. I was driving back home this afternoon on the interstate, fresh from my continuing stint as part of an experimental vaccine trial (take THAT, r.f.k jr.) and I had the radio about as loud as it can go. (It does help.)
R.E.M.’s “It’s the End of the World as We Know It” came on, which seemed apropos for the times. (Though I sure don’t “feel fine”.)
I was wondering what the soundtrack will be as the U.S.of A. as we know it augers into the ground?
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